Sunday, May 03, 2015

Raúl Kollmann in “Ellos dicen culpables sí, juicio no”Página/12 29.04.2015 reports on the resignation of Argentine Héctor Timerman from the Jewish organization AMIA and explains the immediate background of his decision:

[Timerman's resignation is directed to the AMIA, the mutual society to which a part of the members of the Jewish community are affiliated. The AMIA administers the cemeteries, the educational network, some dining facilties, social assistance, support for the elderly and many cultural activities. The members of AMIA vote for their board of directors, these days in the hands of the most religious and orthodox sectors. At the same time, for political questions the representations is assumed to be in the DAIA, where the institutions converge (among them AMIA), the temples, the schools, the clubs. When the leadership of the DAIA is decided, the institutions and clubs with the most members have various votes: AMIA, for instance, has four of the 120 total. With the letter of resignation directed to Leonardo Jmelnitzky, current President of the AMIA, Timerman wants to make it clear that he doesn't wish to be represented by the leadership of the AMIA nor by the DAIA.

In recent weeks, an important group of progressive members of the Jewish community has emerged that constituted the first announcement by progressive Jews who do not feel themselves represented by the AMIA and the DAIA. The ex-Executive Director of the DAIA Jorge Elbaum produced an enormous repercussion with two notes published by Página/12 in which he demonstrates and testifies about the pressure the DAIA received to block the memorandum on Iran. Spokespeople aligned from the PRO, the embassies of the United States and Israel and, promptly, the foundations financed by the vulture funds, particularly by Paul Singer. Prosecutor Nisman himself actively behaved as "a friend" of the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies, also financed by Singer. All of these moves were rejected by the plenary session of [the progressive group] of Argentines of Jewish origin, which was lead by the journalist Miriam Lewin. ...]

[In his conversation with this paper, Timerman recounted the exchanges with the community leaders about the memorandum {the agreement with Iran}. "We told them that it was a step forward, as Interpol or Amnesty International maintained. It was intended to unfetter the situation and try the suspects that Iran had not extradicted. They said yes at first and later no. The President {Cristina Fernández} invited them to bring an alternative idea. And they didn't come up with anything, except the possibility of reforming the Constitution to allow a trial in absentia, something that has never been done in Argentina. For that reason, I insisted in the text {of the resignation letter} that they, the leaders of the Jewish community, did not want to have progress in looking for forms of trying the suspects. They are saying guilty yes, trial no."]]

As I've commented on here numerous times, the AMIA case has become deeply involved in efforts by American neoconservatives, the Government of Israel and the Republican Party to get up a war with Iran. Paul Singer is one of the biggest donors to the Republican Party, whose enthusiasm for the Likud Party of Israel's warlike policies he apparently shares. He's also a supporter of neocon policies and is engaged in a landmark legal dispute with Argentina over "vulture fund" investments in defaulted Argentine bonds. And all of this has become embedded into differences of priorities and outlook within Argentina's Jewish community and with the partisan opposition to Cristina's government and her Peronist Justicialista Party.

The Washington Post, whose editorial stance has been staunchly neoconservative for years, in a recent editorial accused Cristina and her government of promoting anti-Semitism in defending itself over the Nisman/AMIA case, Argentina’s president resorts to anti-Semitic conspiracy theories 04/23/2015. From everything I can see, this is a ludicrous accusation.

In 1997, when he first became involved in the case — known in Argentina by the JCC’s acronym, AMIA — Nisman was a young and ambitious prosecutor making a career in the newly inaugurated system of open trials.

His task was to make presentable the fabrication concocted by Judge Juan José Galeano. With forged evidence, Galeano and other authorities had accused a ring of corrupt police officers of being the “local connection” in the bombing.

The open trial began in 2001 and ended in disaster in 2004. The forgery was so apparent that it didn’t survive scrutiny. The policemen were exonerated. The judge, the prosecutors, the head of the intelligence service, a high-ranking police officer, former president Carlos Menem and the leader of the main political Jewish organization were eventually indicted for the cover-up (and are going to trial in a few months). Nisman somehow survived, and President Néstor Kirchner (Cristina Kirchner’s now late husband, who took office in 2007) appointed him as special prosecutor for the AMIA case. He had to rebuild it from scratch. In 2006, based mostly on foreign intelligence reports, Nisman accused the Iranians of sponsoring the attack, allegedly carried out by Hezbollah militants.

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American poster from the Second World War; that's not one of those in which we are currently engaged, though some people seem to think ...

Johann Gottfried von Herder (1744–1803)

Herder developed a philosophy of history in which he focused on the prominent ideas of historical eras, that he held to be fundamentally shaped by the successive historical stages leading to improvements in civilization. He also developed theories of language anticipating 20th-century linguistics. "Instead of seeing [language] as an assemblage of signs co-ordinated with things, [Herder saw it] rather as the necessary embodiment of a certain form of consciousness, which in this case is that form in which there are such things as signs for us." (Charles Taylor)